Yes, I teleport almost every day in my car.
2006-10-28 16:03:06
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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No. We have no science now that would allow us to scan, store, transmit, and reassemble a living thing.
A fax does not do this. A fax makes a COPY of something on our end. If you faxed a note written in crayon, it does not come out on our end as written in crayon.
Imagine for a moment you wanted to teleport a small ice cube. What technology would allow you to store the billions of tiny bits of information it would take to totally encode each thing you would need to know- not only size, but temp, molecular make-up, the physical location within the cube of each and every impurity...
Now, we have to take those gazillions pieces of data and transmit them, flawlessly- which we would have trouble with right now.
Finally- in the receiving pad- where does the matter come from? Do we need vats of raw materials sitting around? Did we somehow manage a ***** Wonka and transmit tiny pieces of the actual item?
So far, this is pure sci-fi.
Transmitting a proton? That is exciting, but hardly the same thing. When we can transmit an ARRAY of protons in the precise arrangement they were in to start with- then MAYBE we'd have something. Before we get too excited however, let's at least teleport an entire atom.
2006-10-28 16:23:16
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answer #2
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answered by Madkins007 7
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The dream of teleporting atoms and molecules - and maybe even larger objects - has become a real possibility for the first time. The advance is thanks to physicists who have suggested a method that in theory could be used to "entangle" absolutely any kind of particle.
Quantum entanglement is the bizarre property that allows two particles to behave as one, no matter how far apart they are. If you measure the state of one particle, you instantly determine the state of the other. This could one day allow us to teleport objects by transferring their properties instantly from one place to another.
Until now, physicists have only been able to entangle photons, electrons and atoms, using different methods in each case. For instance, atoms are entangled by forcing them to interact inside an optical trap, while photons are made to interact with a crystal.
"These schemes are very specific," says Sougato Bose of the University of Oxford. But Bose and Dipankar Home, of the Bose Institute in Calcutta, have now demonstrated a single mechanism that could be used to entangle any particles, even atoms or large molecules.
You can check the given link for further information.
http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn1888
2006-10-30 04:45:33
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answer #3
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answered by syam p 2
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scientists are already teleporting photons, but not much more. i'm expecting working teleporters in a couple hundred years or so, which realitavely is very soon. do research on mars and you may find something (Doom3! lol). once you think about it, atoms are just balls of energy. i'll bet before you know it, we could store packages on thumb drives. and better yet, COPY AND PASTE! that'll be the day.
2006-10-28 16:15:08
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answer #4
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answered by Ese 3
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YES TELEPORTING IS POSSIBLE THESE DAYS, SCIENTIST S HAVE INVENTED MORE PRIVATE FEATURES FOR HUMANS WHICH CAN ONLY BE ASSOCIATED WITH THE PRESIDENT AND THE GOVERNMENT SO I DONT THINK U WOULD FIND ANY PEOPLE TELEPORTING IN A PUBLIC AREA.
2006-10-28 16:43:16
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answer #5
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answered by gleopathra 3
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well if we begin to acknowledge that we can part the particles in air making a clear and resistanceless route then we could at least arrive at places ten times faster than normally walking thought these particles that add resistance upon us. so in a sense that would be teleporting b/c if the particles are aligned then maybe they could for some sort of wall that could obstruct the view of one so that the illusion of a vanish would appear which would give one the time to COULD YOU BE LOVED? AND LOVE!
2006-10-28 16:11:41
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answer #6
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answered by Flabbergasted 5
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Yes, but It would take a computer with the memory of about 2500 of are current computers, See each cell would have to be accounted for, marked saved sent and then reformed in the exact same way they came apart. The amount of memory required for this is just ob-sered. Not to include we would have to have just a little better understanding of the way the smallest of nuclei worked. It's not that it cant be done we know how we just can't do do to are current technology.
2006-10-28 16:26:21
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answer #7
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answered by matt v 3
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sure, that is accessible. Teleportation is like all different psi capacity or present; it takes the right volume of capacity and the right situations to be a "jumper." even as i became about 15 or 16 years-old I awakened from a negative dream and that i sat up without be conscious in mattress, yet particularly of sitting up i stumbled on myself status twelve ft faraway from my mattress on the room's mild swap, searching decrease back at my mattress; the leap became so on the spot, and that i became quite so startled I certainly anticipated to confirm myself nonetheless in mattress like a scene from the action picture 2001; an section Odyssey! After that evening i might want to not in any respect do something like that back; i became scared sh*tless! sturdy concern can create the go by Riemann area besides as quite severe anger: later on I had heard about somebody else who stumbled on that that they had 'ported and kept their little brother from being hit by technique of a automobile. that is undemanding to make small products 'port, in spite of the indisputable fact that the bigger the guy, the more effective capacity it takes for the leap-- so there are not a good purchase of human beings that're jumpers like contained in the flicks or on television. in case you've been a recommended psi with telekinetic capacity, and may want to concentration that capacity right into a good burst of capacity, you may want to leap to everywhere you needed to be-- yet you more effective perfect be damn particular you comprehend what's at the different end of a leap: in case you may want to materialize in a wall or something-- time ram-- and boost! 2 gadgets can't occupy an same area jointly.
2016-12-05 08:14:28
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answer #8
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answered by bainter 4
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it is not possible bcoz to teleport you will require each atom to be stored electronicaly and this will fill the harddisk of all the computers present today and if one atom is not transported then you may die and one thing that it is not practical it is just shown in science friction movie sanjha kya mamu :-)
2006-10-31 16:43:42
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answer #9
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answered by anand dhavle 2
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No, it is not. Our technology is not advanced enough, and even if it was, the human body is too complex to be put back together again after being broken down into trillions of atoms.
2006-10-28 16:32:42
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answer #10
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answered by bldudas 4
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